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Post Info TOPIC: 40 Eridani


L

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RE: 40 Eridani
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We prefer the identification of 40 Eridani as Vulcan's sun because of what we have learned about both stars at Mount Wilson. The HK Project takes its name from the violet H and K lines of calcium, both sensitive tracers of stellar magnetism. It turns out that the average level of magnetic activity inferred from the H and K absorptions relates to a star's age; young stars tend to be more active than old ones (Sky & Telescope: December 1990, page 589). The HK observations suggest that 40 Eridani is 4 billion years old, about the same age as the Sun. In contrast, Epsilon Eridani is barely 1 billion years old.
Based on the history of life on Earth, life on any planet around Epsilon Eridani would not have had time to evolve beyond the level of bacteria. On the other hand, an intelligent civilization could have evolved over the aeons on a planet circling 40 Eridani. So the latter is the more likely Vulcan sun.
In that case, Mr Spock's daytime star is a 4.4-magnitude multiple system about 16 light-years from Earth. Presumably Vulcan orbits the primary star, an orange main-sequence dwarf of spectral type K1. Data from the HK Project reveal that it has a starspot cycle of roughly 11 years, just like the Sun.

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L

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40 Eridani (also known as Omicron2 Eridani, or Keid, from the Arabic word qayd, (egg) shells) is a triple star system, consisting of an orange-red K dwarf and a red and white dwarf binary, is less than 16.45 light years away from Earth. It is in the constellation Eridanus. The primary star of the system, 40 Eridani A, is an orange star of magnitude 4.4 and is easily visible to the naked eye. The pair 40 Eridani B/C was discovered on January 31, 1783 by William Herschel. It was again observed by Friedrich Georg Wilhelm Struve in 1825 and by Otto Wilhelm von Struve in 1851. In 1910, it was discovered that although component B was a faint star, it was white in colour. This meant that it had to be a small star; in fact it was a white dwarf, the first discovered.
A small telescope with medium power will be sufficient to see the magnitude 9 white dwarf.

Position(2000): RA 04:15:16.32, Dec -07:39:10.34

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40 Eridani, is a star familiar to "Star Trek" fans because the Vulcan homeworld, named Vulcan, orbits the star 40 Eridani A.

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